But make sure it is free and fair.
Analysis
Nadezhda Azhgikhina: Svetlana Alexievich: ‘Freedom Is Long and Hard Work’
The Nobel Prize laureate in literature believes a new generation in the countries of the former USSR will make the dreams of 1991 a reality.
Happy Labor Day Weekend from ACEWA
We will return Tuesday, September 4.
Syria talks in Lausanne end without breakthrough (Reuters)
Syria talks convened by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry in the Swiss city of Lausanne on Saturday evening failed to agree on a common strategy with Russia to end the conflict in Syria, now in its sixth year.
Gordon Hahn: Through the Looking Glass Falsely: A World Without Facts
As the West has turned more and more to Soviet/Russian methods of the ‘big lie’ in order to advance democracy and its interests, the Russia-West propaganda war had produced a post-fact world in which disinformation comes to be believed by its purveyors.
Stephen F. Cohen PODCAST: ‘Vital’ US Moles in the Kremlin Go Missing!
According to New York Times intel leakers, “informants close to” Putin have “gone silent.” What can it all mean?
An Open Letter To The President (Russia-America Goodwill Association)
By Vladislav Krasnov on behalf of Russia & America Goodwill Association
Dear Mr. President:
As your presidential duties will soon expire, I want you make sure your Nobel Peace Prize is deserved: Please instruct your officials to return to the path of negotiations with Russia, be it the Syrian crisis, the lapse of the plutonium nuclear arms control deal or Ukraine….
WSJ Editorial: A Dossier Debunking
His lawyer says the Steele claims about Michael Cohen are false.
Ukraine and Syria: Linked Together by Russia (Robert Hunter)
ACEWA Board Member Sharon Tennison writes, “Robert E. Hunter, U.S. Ambassador to NATO (1993 – 1998), paints a clear picture of how Washington missed one opportunity after another to pursue common-sense policies with Russia. Although the situation is near irretrievable at this late date, Hunter nonetheless remains somewhat hopeful that progress may be made after the November Presidential election.”
Diana Johnstone: The Real Russian Interference in US Politics
To understand the way Washington works, one can focus on the career of lawyer Jonathan M. Winer…
PODCAST: Warmongering in Washington, Preparation for War in Moscow (Stephen F. Cohen)
Nation Contributing Editor Stephen F. Cohen and John Batchelor continue their weekly discussions of the new US-Russian Cold War. (Previous installments are at TheNation.com.) Continuing the subject of last week’s discussion—the growing possibility of actual military conflict between the U.S. and Russia—Cohen and Batchelor agree that more recent developments have made this prospect even more dire.
James Walker: China—Not Russia—Elected Trump
While media and political attention are focused on Russian “meddling” in the 2016 election, attention should be sharply focused instead on the role of China in electing Trump. It is that concern that should inform American action today.
Russia Reads US Bluster as Sign of War (Ray McGovern)
During the Reagan administration, I was one of the CIA analysts assigned to present to White House officials the President’s Daily Brief, which summed up the CIA’s views on the pressing national security issues of the day. If I were still in that job – and assuming CIA analysts are still able to speak truth to power – I am afraid that I would be delivering alarming news about the potential of a U.S.-Russian military clash.
Fred Weir On The New York Times “Blockbuster”
“Kremlin Sources Go Quiet…” via Johnson’s Russia List. A must read.
Key Neocon Calls on US to Oust Putin (Robert Parry)
A prominent neocon paymaster, whose outfit dispenses $100 million in U.S. taxpayers’ money each year, has called on America to “summon the will” to remove Russian President Putin from office, reports Robert Parry.
Bloomberg View: The U.S. Can’t Bring Russia ‘to Its Knees’
At least not without setting off a global energy and financial crisis.
The Snowball Effect of Continued U.S.-Russia Strategic Mistrust (Robert Shines)
One would think that any headline or topic involving the three words “U.S.”, “Russia”, and “nuclear” would immediately command worldwide attention and foster a policy of more restraint with respect to resolving conflict between the two powers. Unfortunately, this hasn’t been the case.
Paul Robinson: A Question of Attitude
A couple of Ukraine-related items caught my attention this week.
Syria may turn out to be Obama’s defining legacy (M.K. Bhadrakumar)
On Monday, the Barack Obama administration fulfilled its week-old threat to suspend bilateral talks with Russia over the Syrian crisis. Does this signal that the dogs of war are about to be unleashed?
Stephen Kinzer: How to interfere in a foreign election
FOR ONE OF THE world’s major powers to interfere systematically in the presidential politics of another country is an act of brazen aggression. Yet it happened.